Attis

Attisis a vegetative divinity and consort of the Great Mother. He is a savior, having descended from the heavens, mingled with lower matter, suffered and risen again, setting an example for us on how we may rise above matter too. His priests were the Gallai, who castrated themselves in re-enactment of one of the principle myths regarding Him and the Great Mother.

The Myth of the Great Mother & Attis

The Mother of the Gods saw Attis lying by the river Gallus and fell in love with Him. She took him, crowned Him with Her cap of stars, and thereafter kept Him with Her. Attis, however, fell in love with a nymph and abandoned the Great Mother to live with the nymph in a cave. For this the Great Mother made Attis go mad, which caused him to castrate Himself. It is after this he regained sanity, leaving His castrated remains with the nymph and returning to dwell with the Great Mother.

Interpretation

Mind over matter – A Mixed interpretation

The myth of the Great Mother and Attis is known for its representation of “mind over matter.” By the very nature of the Gods, they dwell in a higher world, and do not desire to drag themselves down to our world; but rather they desire to lead the things of our earth up.

The Great Mother is also called the Mother of the Gods. The Mother of the Gods is the principle that generates life; that is why she is called Mother. We can thus understand that as She is the principle that generates life; She can thus can be seen as the dynamic aspect of Aion. It is the Great Mother that creates soul, which are immortal and thus never die.

Attis, in contrast, is the creator of all things which are born and die; that is why He is said to have been found by the river Gallus; for the river Gallus signifies the Galaxy/Universe, the point at which corporeal/material existence (which is subject to passions) begins. Attis is a mediating principle between the Great Mother and material existence – an Intellective God who resembles solar rays, a divinity who participates in that world and orders it, and a Logoi through whose agency souls are enabled to ascend.

As the primary Gods make perfect the secondary, the Mother held a non-passionate love for Attis and gives Him a cap of stars. The cap of stars represents a gift of celestial powers, which first elevates Attis “to dance and leap” in the Intellective Realm.

Attis makes a descent into the visible world in order to give it order and fruitfulness, being a divinity who participates in that world and orders it. However, Attis descended to the lowest realm (the material realm, represented by the cave) and wedded a nymph. The nymph represents the dampness of matter, since all that is generated is fluid. This desertion of the Great Mother by Attis is symbolic of Attis overstepping His limit taking participation in matter.

The Great Mother, as the forethought of Aion, restrains Attis (the embodiment of intelligence, Logoi) from association with matter. His recalling and castration symbolizes the triumph of unity over multiformity; essentially of mind over matter, hence why He is called mad and insane before castration but only wise after. He castrates himself, literally giving up his passions, and leaves behind the remains in the Realm of Generation. This is because the process of generation must be stopped somewhere and not allowed to generate something worse than the worst, and thus Attis casts away His generative powers into the creation and is joined with the Gods again.

His restoration to the Great Mother symbolizes the escape of our souls from our corporeal bonds in the Realm of Generation to union with the One (henosis), which is only brought about by the Great Mother.

Seasonal – Mixed Interpretation

The myth also directly relates to the Great Mother’s festival of Hilaria, and shows why we have festivals imitating the cosmos:

And at first we ourselves, having fallen from heaven and living with the nymph (who represents matter), are in despondency, and abstain from corn and all rich and unclean food, for both are hostile to the soul

Foods that are hostile are fruits, vegetables, and roots that grow downwards into the earth or “creep along” it or fish that live in the deep. These are inappropriate foods at the time of a rite whose aim is the ascent of the soul.

Foods that are appropriate are ones that rest high, such as apples; which are sacred and golden, being an image of the rewards of the Mysteries, and must be honored and worshiped for the sake of their archetype.

Then comes the cutting of the tree and the fast, as though we also were cutting off the further process of generation.

The cutting of the sacred tree is a ritual enactment of Cybele’s plucking of Attis from the reeds of the river Gallus that symbolizes the necessity for humans to pluck what is fairest – virtue and piety – to prepare for their elevation to the company of the Goddess.

After that is the drinking of milk, as though we were being born again; after which come rejoicings and garlands and, as it were, a return up to the Gods.

It applies well to spirits rising higher

Furthermore, the Spring equinox is when the fruits of the earth are ceasing to be produced, and thus when we no longer partake in generation

Since it takes place on the Spring Equinox day becomes longer than night; a limit being set to the course of the Sun, and so it recalls the mutilation of Attis

As for the detail of the purificatory Mysteries associated with Hilaria, Julian does comment on it rather discreetly; but nonetheless alludes to the ritual image of the castrated Attis, divining its deeper meaning as symbolic of “the cutting away of all that is excessive and vain in the impulses and movements of the soul.”

Role in the Cosmos

Attis is an Intellective God, being an emanation of Helios as the Logos and is thus Helios’ creative activity, being the immediate creator of the material world.

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HELLENIC FAITH

Hellenic Faith is a website dedicated to Julian Hellenism, a reformed denomination of Hellenism, the polytheistic religion of the Graeco-Roman world, influenced by the teachings and writings of Julian the Philosopher (r. 361-363 ACE) and the divine Iamblichus (c. 245-325 ACE).

This website is under constant construction. It is expected to be completed by (at the very least) the year 2021 ACE. Everything on this website is subject to change. Many articles are incomplete, and those which do seem complete may be subject to complete revision.